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Sing, Sing Celebrate – For a KING

“Darkness cannot drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate; only love can do that.”

Dr. Martin Luther, Jr.

We have no flowery editorial this year. Just a quote, a picture and a video. They say it all.

Breeding Ground Joints: Charlie Sloth’s “One More Drink”

Charlie Sloth has been doing big things online for a number of years and, if you are familiar with his work, he’s quite a character. While his viral videos are the things comedy shows are made of, his rap songs are a bit different. “One More Drink” is evidence that Sloth can meld all that he is in a cong package that is likely to have global appeal. A British rapper, Sloth may have difficulty piercing certain closed minds. It is more likely than not, the progressives and the worldwide community will continue to embrace him. “One More Drink” is the first single from Being Charlie Sloth.

[Buy “One More Drink” on iTunes]

Director : Charlie Sloth

Assistant Director : Mudz

Camera: Rapid

Lights: RapidProducer: Charlie Sloth

Composition: Dominic Owen

Top 10 Stories of 2009 #1 The Death of Michael Jackson

The world stopped on June 25, 2009 when news broke over TMZ and filtered through subsequent media outlets that cultural icon Michael Jackson had died suddenly of cardiac arrest.

That morning, Jackson was discovered not breathing in his Los Angeles bedroom by his doctor Conrad Murray. Several hours before, Jackson had completed a rehearsal for his comeback London concert series without incident.

Murray attempted CPR for 10 minutes with Jackson 12 year old son Prince Michael present before dialing 911. Because of the lack of a landline and not knowing Jackson’s exact address, the entire process extended to 30 minutes.

Murray would later tell authorities that Jackson had a weak pulse when he found him, and that he was still alive when paramedics took him out the house after 42 minutes of failed CPR in the house.

Michael Jackson was transported to Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center, and pronounced dead at 2:26PM following an hour plus of resuscitation attempts.

The fallout was immense.

Internet media numbers soared, with popular sites like Google, Amazon, Twitter, and AOL posting record numbers. Stations such as BET and MTV offered sprawling tributes, while mainstream news outlets such as CNN used their shows to focus around the clock coverage to the emerging Jackson saga.

His July 7 memorial service featured over 17,000 fans at LA’s Staples Center, and performances from Mariah Carey, Usher, John Mayer, Stevie Wonder, and Lionel Richie. The event also featured condolences from Nelson Mandela, Diana Ross, Queen Latifah, Berry Gordy, Kobe Bryant, Magic Johnson, Martin Luther King III, Al Sharpton, and Brooke Shields. The service is most remembered for its conclusion, with Jackson’s tearful daughter Paris lamenting the loss of her father while surrounded by family.

“I want to say that ever since I was born, daddy has been the best father you could ever imagine,” Paris sobbed. “And I just want to say that I love him so much.”

 

 

Michael Jackson’s service was one of the most watched events in history, with a reputed 1 billion viewers worldwide.

 When autopsy results determined the singer’s death with due to a combination of prescription drugs, most notably the anesthetic Propofol, law enforcement subpoenaed Dr. Conrad Murray’s medical records on Jackson, and announced at the end of August the case was referred to prosecutors for possible foul play.

Jackson family members confirmed that the troubled singer had become dependent on prescription drugs, and shunned several intervention attempts, the last being in 2007 when sister Janet and several brothers were turned away by security at Michael’s residence.

Earlier this month, the LAPD completed their investigation into Jackson’s death and verified that the case will be delivered to the DA over the next few weeks charging Dr. Conrad Murray with involuntary manslaughter.

According to information supplied to TMZ, the DA will have a difficult case since no laws were broken by Murray supplying Jackson with Propofol. Prosecutors will be required to show Murray’s actions constitute “gross negligence,” and resulted in the icon’s death.

To date, Michael Jackson has received dozens of tributes from artists and colleagues such as Spike Lee, Madonna, The Game, Diddy, Chris Brown, Akon, LL Cool J, Usher, Boyz II Men, and 50 Cent.

Jackson’s death also catapulted him to the #1 selling artist of 2009. He sold 29 million LPs worldwide, with 8.2 millions in the United States. The King of Pop broke several Billboard records, the most prominent being having four Top 20 best-selling albums (Number Ones, Thriller, The Essential Michael Jackson, This Is It) in a single year.

In addition, the concert footage film “This Is It” has become the highest grossing documentary-concert film of all time with $257 million in revenue.

Michael Jackson is survived by his three children Michael Joseph Jackson, Jr, Paris Michael Katherine Jackson, and Prince Michael Jackson II.

Control and disbursement of his estate, estimated to be over $560 million in assets, is expected to play out over the next several years.

AHH Stray News: Wale For Haiti, RIP Shacan Lord, Afrika Bambaataa Does Biz

(AllHipHop News) Washington D.C. rapper Wale has announced a fundraiser to benefit Wyclef Jean’s Yele Haiti non-profit organization. Wale will be joined by D.C. artists like Tabi Bonney, D.C. Don Juan, Phil Ade, XO, Kingpen Slim, K-Beta, Que (formerly of Day 26) and other surprise guests tonight (January 18) at the 9:30 Club. The event, which will be hosted by College Hill South Beach’s Chris Cole, is being organized by DMV Helps Haiti. All proceeds from the event will be donated to the Haiti Earthquake Relief effort. Doors to the DMV Helps Haiti Benefit Concert open at 6:00 PM. Tickets start at $20 and all proceeds will be donated to Yele Haiti.

 

Haiti’s Hip-Hop community is mourning the loss of Evenson “Shacan Lord” Francis, an important figure in the country’s scene. According to reports, Shacan Lord was killed when his recording studio collapsed on him during the 7.0 earthquake, which completely destroyed Port-Au-Prince last Tuesday (January 12). Shacan Lord, 31, was a member of the popular rap group Gasoline Clan. His fellow rap group members gave him a private burial, an extraordinary feat, considering the destruction of the city and the chaos that has fallen upon the country. “We couldn’t bury him like the others,” Shacan Lord’s producer, Roosevelt Francois told the AFP. “We wanted to do something special for him.”

 

Pioneering rap star Africa Bambaataa has joined the board of directors of Mojofiti, a language technology company. Mojofiti is currently developing la range of language-enabled technology solutions and platforms designed to promote collaboration and communication across the globe. “As we further develop our plans to expand Mojofiti on a global basis, we are focused on ensuring the leadership of our company is comprised of global thinkers and people who can make an impact on an international scale,” said Dennis Wakabayashi, founder of Mojofiti. “Afrika’s worldly views and incredible career spent reaching people across borders with new cultural expressions and messages of peace makes him an ideal fit for our board of directors. Afrika is truly an inspiration to us all, and we look forward to working with him and the members of the UZN [Universal Zulu Nation] to achieve our common goals.”

More than Aid, Haiti Needs Allies

 The views expressed with in this editorial don’t necessarily reflect the views of AllHipHop.com or its staff.

“AllHipHop.com and other sites,

activists, entities and caring people are scrambling to create Hip-Hop for

Haiti. What it is exactly, we’ll let you know soon, but we know we will

continue to help the nation and support people like Wyclef that are more saints

than rappers these days,” wrote AllHipHop

CEO Chuck Creekmur last Friday.[1]

In his editorial, Creekmur castigated the apathy he believes certain well-to-do

Hip-Hop artists have displayed since news broke last Tuesday night of the 7.0 Mw

earthquake which leveled large parts of Haiti, claimed thousands of lives, and

displaced millions.

I applaud Creekmur for his charitable

endeavors at this time of need, but it’s also worth noting that aid alone never

goes far enough—more so in this specific scenario. Haiti needs more than aid—it

needs allies ready to carry as many crosses in not only helping rebuild broken

infrastructures, but ensuring political stability once the rubble clears, the

dead bodies have been disposed of, and mainstream media has turned its camera

lenses to more titillating topics.

In dark times like this, especially when

concerning darker people of the world, the liberal capitalists come out in

droves, ready to give as much tax-deductible money their accountants agree to.

As philosopher Slavoj Žižek wrote three years ago, this crew—of movie stars, TV

personalities, news anchors, entertainers, executives, wealthy philanthropists,

etc.—“love a humanitarian crisis; it brings out the best in them.” They never

hesitate to take a moment from their busy lives to urge everyone watching

whatever PSA they’re staring in this

time to “give” as “much” as possible; to spear a dime; to empty their pockets

for a good cause. But, to Žižek’s

point, more often than not, whatever aid is accumulated not only fails to reach

populations most in need, but also works to “mask” the underlying economic

exploitation exacerbating the disasters: “There is a chocolate-flavoured

laxative available on the shelves of US stores which is publicised with the

paradoxical injunction: Do you have constipation? Eat more of this chocolate!—i.e.

eat more of something that itself causes constipation.”[2]

And, it seems, the laxative-pushing has

already begun. The conservative Heritage Foundation was quick to remind patrons

that “Amidst the Suffering, Crisis in Haiti Offers Opportunities to the U.S.”

(Later renamed: “Things to Remember While Helping Haiti.”) In a blog post for

the foundation, an author describes why this life-altering (and life-stopping)

moment must be used, amidst the aid efforts of course, to “interrupt the

nightly flights of cocaine to Haiti and the Dominican Republic from the

Venezuelan coast,” to “prevent any large-scale movement by Haitians to take to

the sea in dangerous and rickety watercraft to try to enter the U.S.

illegally,” to “insist that the Haiti government work closely with the U.S. to

insure that corruption does not infect the humanitarian assistance,” and to

“implement a strong and vigorous public diplomacy effort to counter the

negative propaganda certain to emanate from the Castro-Chavez camp.” All these

are critical since “[l]ong-term reforms for Haitian democracy and its economy

are … badly overdue.”[3]

This is why aid is never innocent. There

are almost always political incentives tied to foreign aid. It’s not enough

merely to cut checks or text a few numbers; it’s critical to know into whose

hands—and toward what ends—one’s cash is going.  

Haiti has suffered enough—from the

bellicosity of its affluent neighbors—and as if to punish Haitians further, mainstream

media has made a circus of the crisis.

Once word of the disaster hit newsrooms

across the country, the big networks dispatched their celebrity correspondents with

swiftness. Anderson Cooper, Ann Curry, Brian Williams, Bill Hemmer—you name them.

Of course very few of the big-name bobbleheads were prepared for reality as it

stared them down. Take, for example, FOX News minion Bill Hemmer who whined,

“I’ve had the good fortune of seeing a good part of this world, and a lot of

the 3rd world, and this is the most inaccessible story I have ever covered.” He

went on: “It’s inaccessible in so many ways: our ability to communicate, our

ability to move around, our ability to get information.”[4]

Oh, you don’t say, Bill. Inaccessible? In a country systematically destroyed—and

turned upside down—by economic foreign policies!—Inaccessible? NBC’s Brian

Williams was less caustic: “This is just a colossal calamity.”[5]

The celebrity news men and women, with sleeves rolled up, made sure to

dramatize and document every aspect of their sojourn in Haiti—from sleeping in baggage containers, to inhaling

the toxic smell of dead bodies. These are the “stories” of their lives, as

Williams put it.  

But where’s Haiti’s story?

Starting last Tuesday night, viewers were

informed Haiti is such a “poor” country. Poor Haiti. Why this country is “poor”

has hardly gotten a second of address. Why a country only 500 miles from

Florida had, long before the earthquake, 50% of its citizens malnourished, with

70% making less than $1 a day, couldn’t be of lesser concern.[6]

In recent times, one other similar event—dramatically affecting the lives of

poor Black folk—comes to mind: Katrina.

The parallels are unmistakable:

1)     

The

historical antecedents which made both natural disasters even worse are almost

entirely ignored. In Katrina’s case, for a state with the third highest rate of

children living in poverty, and whose illiteracy rate was 40%, many, educated

by popular press, wondered why residents couldn’t simply drive out of the

impending storm. For Haiti, the most financially disempowered country in the

Western hemisphere, dilapidated by decades of political instability (sponsored

by certain governments), and flooded with foreign food imports and

subsidization—which inevitably led to famine, which inevitably led to street

riots and violent protests in mid-2008: little of this history has found solace

in the shock-and-awe broadcasts of network news and cable chatter.[7]

Instead, we are simply told that Haiti is a “poor” country. Poor by nature. Worse yet, the vibrant

history of successful revolt against former colonizers, of economic

independence, of genuine democracy—which spans centuries—is unknown to most

raised on Cable Network News.  

2)     

The

same news channels who sensationalized every bit of the Katrina debacle, and

then patted each other’s backs warmly for reportedly—though sufficient proof

doesn’t exist—holding accountable elected officials responsible, are back at

it. Sticking microphones into the faces of hapless victims, holding up babies

as props, shedding insincere tears—back at it. One wonders where the crocodile

tears were before relatives were picking and pulling out family members from

beneath bricks and buildings. The rain of salt water could have done greater

good when Haiti’s peoples were catching hell, for decades, due in large part to

the economic policies of a few superpowers.[8 ]

3)     

“I

hate the way they portray us in the media. You see a black family, it says,

‘They’re looting.’ You see a white family, it says, ‘They’re looking for

food’,” Kanye West eloquently protested five years ago, in wake of images,

disseminated by TV, web, and print media, describing Black New Orleans families

disproportionately (in stark contrast to those of Whites) as looters—rather

than harmless citizens starving of hunger.[9]

And, though the disparity of racial representation hasn’t been featured in the same

sense this time, news folk have already gotten down to the business of fixating

on a few Haitian men armed with machetes, and on reports of food-looting, than

the hungry bellies left unfilled and the lost ones unrecovered. Not only does

this thoughtless practice offer a very unfortunate and unfair presentation of

the real reality, it also discourages

some from giving any further since, they figure, their charitable dollars are

likely to end up being misused or looted by street thugs and rogues. Just as

with the many unsubstantiated reports of babies raped in the Superdome and

mothers sexually assaulted, news of widespread, uncontrollable crimes are also

dominating mainstream reports.[10]

4)     

With

this, of course, comes the rationalization of military boots on the ground. For

Katrina, it was the criminal gang Blackwater dispatched.[11]

For Haiti, it is the U.S. Army and U.N. Peacekeeping forces—and, to be sure, backup private security. 5 years ago,

police forces ran amok, with unfettered and unrestricted power, imprisoning (or

attacking) any citizen who even looked suspicious (Black and male).[12]

There’s no reason to believe the same wouldn’t happen—or isn’t already

happening—again in Haiti. And reports of Blackwater employees blowing off heads and clashing with innocent civilians

should dispel the mistruth that military might can do the job of relief organizations.  

5)     

The

cranks of the religious right never disappoint in helping translate God’s thoughts. Just last week, Rev. Pat

Robertson informed millions of viewers—who, I can only assume, he believes are

dumber than 5th graders—that the people of Haiti are simply paying

for their “pact to the devil.” They’ve been “cursed,” he lamented. Not economic

exploitation; not hazardous architectural decisions forced by economic

exploitation; not a natural disaster aided by an abused planet; but divine retribution—as was also said

following Katrina. “Something happened a long time ago in Haiti, and people

might not want to talk about it,” Rev. Robertson explained on his international

program, “The 700 Club.” “They were under the heel of the French—you know,

Napoleon III, or whatever. And they got together and swore a pact to the devil.

They said, ‘We will serve you if you’ll get us free from the French.’ True

story. And so, the devil said, ‘Okay, it’s a deal’.”[13]

It’s obvious Robertson’s twisted theological thinking is steeped in racism, in

a belief, much like slave masters convinced themselves centuries ago, that

white domination of Black “savages” was divine ordinance. But it also bespeaks

an extremist philosophy of Christianity—far from the redemptive gospel of Jesus

Christ—that preaches eternal damnation of every sinful—better yet liberal—soul.

When Katrina struck and dead Black bodies were shown swimming in muddied waters,

popular preacher John Hagee, another press secretary for God, explained why it was wrong to feel sorry for the victims (in

both cases, predominantly Black): “What happened in New Orleans looked like the

curse of God. In time, if New Orleans recovers and becomes [a] pristine city,

it can … be called a blessing. But at this time it’s called a curse.”[14]

But for all the parallels between

Katrina and Haiti, one difference shatters all similarities: the Bush gang was

well-equipped, financially and infrastructurally, to provide relief efforts for

dying citizens. Haiti was in no such shape. Even if all government agencies

were functioning faultlessly, there still was a great gap in what could be done

and what should be done. The apathy of cold-hearted, insecure nitwits like Rush

Limbaugh notwithstanding: “[ W]e’ve already donated to Haiti. It’s called the

U.S. income tax.”[15]

Katrina victims, however, deserved more from a government fully capable of

providing “adequate evacuation plans … [and] transportation for people

[lacking] money, cars, or help to get them out of the city.”[16]

The indifference of brain-dead megaphones like Bill O’Reilly notwithstanding:

“Many, many, many of the poor in New Orleans … weren’t going to leave no

matter what you did. They were drug-addicted. They weren’t going to get turned

off from their source. They were thugs.”[17]

Haitians, it is true, need all the help

they can get, but, as Naomi Klein, author of The Shock Doctrine, warns, “crises are often used now as the

pretext for pushing through policies that you cannot push through under times

of stability. Countries in periods of extreme crisis are desperate for any kind

of aid, any kind of money, and are not in a position to negotiate fairly the

terms of that exchange.”[18]

Desperation ought not to be abused by

oligarchic governments to drown Haiti into more debt or hold that sovereign

nation economically hostage. Desperation

ought not to be abused to enforce even more draconian mandates that only

promote further instability. Desperation

ought not to be abused to enhance specific political policies that only service

imperialistic ambitions. Unless one still believes in fairy tales, it’s almost

unthinkable to assume many foreign governments, who’ve already come bearing

gifts, don’t see this as an opportunity to accomplish all three.  

Katrina should serve a sobering

reminder.

While human beings were hanging from

rooftops and stranded in water-packed houses, Republican leaders were promoting

“relief measures … to achieve a broad range of conservative economic and social

policies.”[19]

If Haitians are to lead lives of dignity, devoid of foreign intrusion, allies

would have to do more than just donate money or relief resources in the coming

months and years. Though the earthquake as a natural disaster was almost

unpreventable, it also stands true that, as was written post-Katrina, “a

long-gathering storm of misguided policies and priorities preceded the

tragedy.”[20]

And this is where Harry Reid comes in.

Reid made news recently for comments underlying why Obama’s light skin and Ivy

League parlance—lack of “Negro dialect”—helped endear him to a mainstream

(white) majority. Flip that and the implications are obvious: Haitians, like

many New Orleans residents, are of dark skin and, most likely, speak in non-purified vernacular. Thus, their

concerns—indeed their humanities—were never of top priority in the hearts and

minds of those now rushing to shell out cash for these “poor” people. They aren’t “clean” and “nice-looking,” as

Vice President Biden might put it; thus, for decades and even centuries, their

plights were ignored—rendered inconsequential.[21]

But now that the earth has opened up to swallow a people long-neglected and

forgotten, we witness a stumbling-over of communities and countries, worldwide,

to “help” out at this most unfortunate of times.  

But this charade would only last a few

weeks—as always. In but a little while, the people of Haiti, like New Orleans

residents, would be left to fend for themselves and, most tragically, left to

defend themselves against neoliberal capitalists with insidious intents. And

the game has only just begun.  

Last week, House speaker Nancy Pelosi

expressed hope to see this “tragedy” transformed into a “new, fresh start” for

Haiti—an opportunity to build a “boom economy.” Pelosi drew from personal

history: “From my own experience with earthquakes, being from San Francisco, I

think that this can be an opportunity for a real boom economy in Haiti.”[22]

The same was said post-Katrina, and, within 2 years, permanent changes were

already instituted to reframe the city of New Orleans into a Disney-like

tourist attraction—wiped clean of its rich, Black history (and residents). None

of this was easy, of course. But it worked with a systematic plan including “criminally

contaminated trailers for Katrina-stuck families, hotel evictions, displacement

of communities [through] the demolition of public housing projects, rampant

homelessness, and forced evacuation [of] helpless families.”[23]

There are no reasons to believe Haiti

isn’t headed for the same fate. With George W. Bush and Bill Clinton

spearheading official relief efforts in Haiti, it seems, in fact, almost the

inevitable fate. Only a courageous countervailing movement that stands strong

for the dignities and humanities of Haitians—during the aftermath and beyond: when

TV channels have moved on to the next circus, when people have stopped giving

and relief organizations are running out of aid—would save Haiti from an even

greater earthquake already rattling the ground beneath.

Tolu Olorunda is a cultural critic whose

work regularly appears on TheDailyVoice.com

and other online journals. He can be reached at: To***********@***il.com.

[1] Chuck Creekmur,

“Haiti: Does Hip-Hop Care,” All Hip Hop

(January 15, 2010). Online:

https://allhiphop.com/stories/editorial/archive/2010/01/15/22097684.aspx

[2] Slavoj Žižek,

“Nobody has to be vile,” London Review of

Books (April 6, 2006). Online:

http://www.lrb.co.uk/v28/n07/slavoj-zizek/nobody-has-to-be-vile

[3] Jim Roberts,

“Things to Remember While Helping Haiti,” The

Foundry (January 13, 2010). Online: http://blog.heritage.org/2010/01/13/things-to-remember-while-helping-haiti/

[4] Danny Shea,

“Bill Hemmer From Haiti: ‘This Is The Most Inaccessible Story I Have Ever

Covered’,” The Huffington Post

(January 14, 2010). Online: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/01/14/bill-hemmer-from-haiti-th_n_424094.html

[5] Danny Shea,

“Brian Williams In Haiti: ‘This Is Just A Colossal Calamity’,” The Huffington Post (January 14, 2010).

Online:

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/01/14/brian-williams-in-haiti-t_n_423550.html

[6] Lenore Daniels,

“The U.S.’s ‘Fidelity to Our Values’ is Haiti’s ‘Tragedy’,” The Black Commentator (January 14,

2010). Online (Subscription Required): http://www.blackcommentator.com/358/358_ror_fidelity_to_values_haiti.php

[7] Earl Ofari

Hutchinson, “Where was the world when Haiti really needed it?” The Daily Voice (January 14, 2010).

Online: http://thedailyvoice.com/voice/2010/01/where-was-the-world-when-haiti-1-002493.php

[ 8] Garry

Pierre-Pierre, “As Haiti Embargo Tightens, Poor Children Get Hungrier,” The New York Times (July 3, 1994).

Online: http://www.nytimes.com/1994/07/03/world/as-haiti-embargo-tightens-poor-children-get-hungrier.html?pagewanted=1

[9] Aaron Kinney,

“‘Looting’ or ‘finding’? Bloggers are outraged over the different captions on

photos of blacks and whites in New Orleans,” Salon (September 1, 2005). Online:

http://dir.salon.com/story/news/feature/2005/09/01/photo_controversy/index.html

[10] Gary Younge,

“Murder and rape – fact or fiction?” The

Guardian (September 6, 2005). Online: http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2005/sep/06/hurricanekatrina.usa3

[11] Daniela Crespo

and Jeremy Scahill, “Overkill in New Orleans,” Alternet (September 12, 2005). Online: http://www.alternet.org/katrina/25320/

[12] Photographic

report detailing questionable shootings of 10 civilians, following Katrina:

http://media.nola.com/law_and_disorder/other/NOPD-Katrina-Incidents2.pdf

[13] Amanda Terkel,

“Pat Robertson Cites Haiti’s Earthquake As What Happens When You ‘Swear A Pact

To The Devil’,” Think Progress

(January 13, 2010). Online: http://thinkprogress.org/2010/01/13/robertson-haiti/

[14] Matt Corley,

“Hagee Says Hurricane Katrina Struck New Orleans Because It Was ‘Planning A

Sinful’ ‘Homosexual Rally’,” Think

Progress (April 23, 2008). Online: http://thinkprogress.org/2008/04/23/hagee-katrina-mccain/

[15] Audio: http://mediamatters.org/mmtv/201001130022

[16] Henry A. Giroux,

Stormy Weather: Katrina and the Politics

of Disposability (Boulder: Paradigm Publishers, 2006), p. 43.

[17] Audio and

Transcript: http://mediamatters.org/mmtv/200509150001

[18] “Naomi Klein

Issues Haiti Disaster Capitalism Alert: Stop Them Before They Shock Again,”

Democracy Now! (January 14, 2010). Online: http://www.democracynow.org/2010/1/14/naomi_klein_issues_haiti_disaster_capitalism

[19] Noam Chomsky, Interventions (San Francisco, CA: City

Lights Publishers, 2007), p. 149.

[20] Ibid., p. 147.

[21] Ibid., “The

U.S.’s ‘Fidelity to Our Values’ is Haiti’s ‘Tragedy’,” The Black Commentator.

[22] “Top US

lawmaker: Quake aid may give Haiti ‘new fresh start’,” AFP (January 16, 2010). Online: http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5jUdiiS9N1b_tKyvG6QWqj69grSqw

[23] Tolu Olorunda,

“Hurricane Katrina and the aftermath of apathy,” The Daily Voice (August 28, 2009). Online: http://thedailyvoice.com/voice/2009/08/this-is-working-very-well-for-002230.php

Monday Fashion Feature: Trend Alert: Preppy Chic

The classic boyish preppy look will be in full effect for spring 2010 – but the key for ladies is to ad a sultry edge this time around.  Keeping current with the hard rock chic look, typical pieces like blazers, trench coats, pencil skirts and such are kicked up a notch with unusual cuts, uses of fabrics, and details. Take Burberry, who reinvented their classic trench coat multiple times for spring/summer 2010: Having recently caught the film Sherlock Holmes, Rachel McAdams sexy menswear style comes to mind:  Normally colors associated with this look are rich dark navy, burgundy, tan etc. – but as you can see from Burberry’s icy lavender trench coat with bold black buttons, it’s ok to have some fun with it this spring. Get the look with these pieces from DJPremium.com: Striped Jacket by Vivienne Westwood Anglomania Gaho Trench by Miss Sixty Fallon Oxford Flats by Dolce VitaAll Geometry Strapless Dress by French ConnectionSummer Tweed Pant by Converse by John VarvatosDobson Tuxedo B##### by Harajuku Lovers

Who Is Cooler: Diddy Or Jay-Z?

The views expressed with in this editorial don’t necessarily reflect the views of AllHipHop.com or its staff. 

 

Since “cool” is all relative for the sake of this argument I will define it as being someone whose lifestyle and mannerisms we look to emulate.  Someone we look to, to know what car to drive, what clothes to wear and how to wear them.  Basically, who has more influence over the culture?  The other day I was asked whom I think is cooler between Jay-Z and Diddy and I had to give the crown to Mr. Sean “Take That, Take That” Combs.

Be clear, I’m not accusing Jay-Z of being un-cool, so Jay stans fall back.

Bar none, Jay-Z and Diddy have set more trends than any other artists in the past decade.  They’ve both parlayed their influence into lucrative businesses outside of music and have defined cool for a generation.  However, to me it seems like Jay’s cool factor is depleting while Diddy’s only grows stronger.

 I say that because I feel like Jay-Z used to REALLY influence people.  If he said throwbacks were done it was over…no questions asked.  Jay says the 4.0 Range is no bueno???  You better go get a six.  Button ups, Rocawear, Evisu Jeans, Maybachs, And so on and so on.  We followed Jay from Marcy to Forbes and our tastes changed with his.

But recently not so much…

Cristal isn’t cool? Uhmmmm….if I had to choose between Ace Of Spades and Cristal, I want Cris.  It’s still the status symbol of choice unless of course you’re Jockin Jay-Z.  Autotune is dead? How many of your (or your girl’s) current favorite records have Autotune? All black everything? Did YOU run out and get a goth wardrobe?  I didn’t.

 

We still care what he has to say but nowadays it’s more like, “Thanks for your opinion, Jay, but we like what we like still.”

 We respect him as an artist, we admire him as a businessman and revere him as a legend but we don’t really look to him to know what’s cool anymore.

 

Diddy’s influence is also legendary.  The mid to late 90’s will forever be remembered as the Bad Boy era of shiny suits, bacchanal style partying and over the top opulence.  Although he’s not the most respected producer, rapper, actor (you get the idea) he does have a certain magic that has kept us intrigued over the years and we love him just as much today.Diddy is a big reason that Twitter and Ustream became the new, cool thing to do among urbanites.  Jay-Z trends when his album drops but Diddy trends year round when he makes up phrases like #lockin, #twittassness, #letsgo etc.  Much like Jay-Z, Diddy introduced us to a new liquor and told us it was the cool thing to drink. And, in my opinion Ciroc has been way more successful than other celebrity endorsed brands.  We used to go for the Goose now we go for the Ciroc…it just feels more baller-like and, like I said above, no change on the high end champagne preference.  He introduced us to the concept of “Bitchassness,” made it cool to vote (Vote or Die), and had swag long before we killed that word. 

After giving it a little thought I believe Diddy’s cool factor has outlasted Jay’s because he has adapted to the internet in a way Hov hasn’t.  Jay-Z’s whole image is secretive, secluded, exclusive which is why he never did cribs or anything like that. But now we like to know EVERYTHING about celebrities.  We want them to Ustream while they record their albums, we want them to tweet what they eat, what they’re watching, who their with etc.  We feel like we KNOW them especially Diddy so when he says, “Ciroc is the drink to drink” it’s like one of our friends co-signing.But Jay has almost NO internet presence (Well, there is roc4life.com) he’s still as secluded as he was in the 90’s.  So when he drops an album of course we all want to hear it – he’s an icon – but when he has a new cool thing for us to do (or not do) we’re not so eager to follow because we don’t feel the same connection.Lastly, you have to keep in mind I’m not talking about grown folks and Jay and Diddy’s “command” over their habits.  I mean the kids. If you can still remember how quickly things changed when Jay said throwbacks weren’t cool you’ll always remember Jay as that cultural titan.  But there’s a whole generation of kids coming into adulthood that don’t remember that.  They don’t even remember the shiny suit days but they know Diddy from @iamdiddy, youtube, Making The Band etc.

 Well there goes my argument…what do you think??  When you put talent and music aside – which of these two rap gods is cooler?

 

 

Nipsey Hussle, Pac-D##, SAS Headline Concert for Haiti

(AllHipHop News) Tonight, (January 17), a number of West coast Hip-Hop acts will lend their support to the relief efforts underway to aid the island of Haiti, which was destroyed during a massive earthquake on Tuesday (January 12).

 

Nipsey Hussle, Pac-D## and Strong Arm Steady will headline the “COOL Relief Effort and Benefit Concert” for Haiti.

 

Organizers are asking fans to bring canned goods, food, clothes, medical supplies or anything that can be sent to benefit the country.

 

The COOL Relief Effort, which is hosted by Devi Dev and the Lax Paperboys, will also feature performances by 1500 or Nothin, UNI, Diz Gibran, Blu + Mainframe, DOM Kennedy, Tiron and Problem.

 

DJ Drewbyrd, DJ Bianca and DJ Sean G. have also signed on board to provide sounds for tonight’s The benefit concert takes place tonight at Echoplex in Los Angeles.

 

Ticket prices are a $20 donation, with all proceeds going towards Wyclef’s www.Yele.org and the Earthquake Alliance.